What about intellectual property rights?
Real right refers to the right of civil subjects to directly control specific things and enjoy their interests within the scope prescribed by law, and to exclude others' interference. Its legal characteristics include: (1) Real right is absolute right (right to the world). There is only one right subject of real right, the obligee is specific, the obligor is an unspecified third person, and the content of obligation is omission, that is, as long as it does not infringe on the exercise of rights by the obligee, the real right is an absolute right. (2) Property right is property right. Property right is a kind of right with material content, which is directly reflected in property interests. Property interests include the use of things, the ownership of things and the guarantee established on the value of things, which is opposite to personal rights. (3) The object of real right is things, and there are objects. (4) Property right is exclusive. First of all, the owner of real right can fight against all unspecified people, so real right is a kind of right to the world; Secondly, the same thing is not allowed to have incompatible property rights (the most typical thing is that there can be no two ownership rights in one thing, but one ownership right and several mortgages can coexist at the same time), that is, "one thing and one right". Intellectual property law refers to the general name of legal norms regulating various social relations arising from the creation and use of intellectual achievements and in the process of confirming, protecting and exercising the intellectual property rights of the owners of intellectual achievements. Intellectual property rights refer to the exclusive rights enjoyed by citizens or legal persons and other subjects in intellectual creation or innovation activities according to the provisions of the law, also known as "intellectual achievement rights" and "intangible property rights", which mainly include copyright (copyright), patent rights (including invention patents, utility model patents and design patents) and trademark rights. Its legal features include: (1) The object of intellectual property is the intellectual achievement of human beings, which is an intangible property. (2) Intellectual property has both property and personal attributes (such as the right of signature, the right of modification, etc.). (3) Intellectual property rights are exclusive. (4) Intellectual property has the characteristics of timeliness. (5) Intellectual property rights have regional characteristics. To sum up, the biggest difference between property rights and intellectual property rights is that, first, the object of property rights must be objects, and it must be tangible (such as air, wind, electricity, etc. do not belong to tangible things); The object of intellectual property is intellectual achievement, which belongs to immateriality. Second, property rights generally only have property attributes, while intellectual property rights have both property attributes and personal attributes. Personal point of view